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Marriage Migration of Mongolian Women to South Korea
Tsetsegjargal Tseden
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DOI:10.17265/2159-5526/2014.12.006
National University of Mongolia, Mongolia
Underpinning most of the Korean-Mongolian relationship is the shared view that these two nations have racial, linguistic, historical, and religious connections. Both peoples cite the famous Mongolian blue spot, as well as the Mongolian Empire’s close relations with the Koryo dynasty in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. However, it is undeniable that in recent years, Mongolia’s relations with South Korea have grown much wider and deeper in scope. When it comes to multiculturalism, a South Korea’s overarching social phenomenon, tens of thousands of Mongolian expatriates are one of primary contributors to the first-ever trend throughout Korean history. Marriage migration of Mongolians to South Korea has increased since mid-1990s, in company with immigrant laborers, and became one of the primary contributors to the binational population movement. This paper deals with intertwining migration of Mongolian population to South Korea and describes characteristic of Korean-Mongolian binational marriage, using statistical data and other relevant researches.
Bi-national relation, marriage migration, gender, women
Sociology Study, December 2014, Vol. 4, No. 12, 1050-1059
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